This is my first virtual tour with Panotour Pro 2.0. The second panorama of the sunrise is my largest spherical panorama to date, 1.5 gigapixels, and my first spherical panorama stitched with AutoPano Giga. I put more information such as camera settings, brackets, number of photos, editing workflow, etc. for each panorama under the lower right "i" button on the menu. There are also buttons for a photo gallery and a timelapse video to the lower left.

Nice work I like the second sphere better then the first one, both are beautifuly stitched, but the first one is a bit to Spinal Tappy for my personal liking. And to Des I say the same as Cor den Biggelaer said to a freind of mine when he complained that his Ducatti Den Biggelaer had vibrations comming from the gearbox at 270 km/h....."Then you have to switch a gear up".....he had forgotten that he now had 7 instead of 6 gears (as on his old bike).....okay then it reached 320 km/h without vibrations....now the same applies here....this is a 1.5 Gpixel sphere, so just zoom in and the gittering disappears.

The second one of sunrise is my favorite too. I spent a lot of time and effort on that one trying to get the colors and white balance very natural. The first one I had fun with HDR. Neither of them are sharpened on export from Lightroom. The quality is medium on export from PTP 2.0. The slight flicker when zoomed out shows up on my laptop but not on my high end desktop with fast refresh rate IPS screens. I figured it was just my video card struggling on the laptop or the cheaper TN LCD panel. The quality is too low to see flicker on my iPad. Can't wait for multi resolution tiling on iPads!

I didn't know about the description and titles yet, that's cool! For this tour I tried to do everything completely in the GUI with no hand tweaking at all, just to show off how far PTP 2.0 has come along already. I did tweak two things though: I added my custom metadata to the HTML file so it would share properly on social media and I added 'playTourSounds();' to closeKolorBoxCallback-webVideoViewer so the background music would resume when the timelapse video was closed.

Did you see the timelapse video? We shot a couple sunrises and sunsets there and even captured the northern lights on one night.